VirtualBSD 9.0 Released
ReeceTarbert writes "VirtualBSD 9.0 is a desktop-ready FreeBSD 9.0-RELEASE built around the XFCE Desktop Environment for good aesthetics and usability, and is distributed as a VMware appliance (that can also be made to work with VirtualBox) so even non techies can be up and running in minutes. The most common applications, plugins and multimedia codecs are ready since the first boot and chances are that you'll find VirtualBSD very functional right out of the box. However, it should be noted that VirtualBSD is more a technology demonstrator than a fully fledged distribution, therefore is squarely aimed at people that heard about FreeBSD but have never tried it, didn't have enough time
to build the system from scratch, or have since moved to a different OS but still need their FreeBSD fix from time to time."
Why did they make it look just like the Mac OS?
I've never seen BSD as something that really attracts new users so much as retains existing ones.
That's too bad .. the aging FreeBSD VM that I've had for a few years now won't cleanly upgrade from the old and creaky FreeBSD 7.1 I have on it now.
I was hoping for something that was all ready to go.
Guess I'll have to dedicate some time to slog through either an upgrade or a reinstall. Or, just stop using it altogether.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Already (sigh ...)
Site's slashdotted quickly
I wonder what pos operating system it's running.
therefore is squarely aimed at people that heard about FreeBSD but have never tried it
(minor) pedant rant:
... an empty set.
Everyone who has ever loaded a web page has tried FreeBSD.
Everyone who has ever heard about FreeBSD has loaded a web page.
ergo
This distribution is squarely aimed at
The Admin and the Engineer
What kind of support do recent ATI cards have on FreeBSD as it seems AMD does not provide any kind of driver.
>and is distributed as a VMware appliance (that can also be made to work with VirtualBox) so even non techies can be up and running in minutes.
For the non-techies who know how to launch a VMware appliance...
If you are really concerned about the slashdot effect on your servers, you probably shouldn't publish the virtualbox instructions as a series of images!
One thing that such a product would be pretty good for is that while creating virtual machines & providing IPs to their virtual network connections, they will be able to make use of IPv6 addresses, which are plenty, as opposed to IPv4 addresses, that are scarce enough as it is w/o having to assign separate ones to each virtual machine. This way, each virtual machine can have a virtual network connection that is separate from the one belonging to the host machine.
Only thing I wonder - what are the hosts on which this runs as a VMware appliance? What would be the benefit here, as opposed to running Windows VMs on FreeBSD? Is VirtualBSD something that can be installed on its own on a computer, like ESX, or is it something that can be installed only as a virtual machine?
Same as many people use on Linux.
I've never seen BSD as something that really attracts new users so much as retains existing ones.
Oh it gains users, they just don't know they're using BSD. BSD license instead of GPL means its an anti-social community, where you don't have to contribute back, which is why its much smaller and weaker than the GPL community. But if legal demands that your embedded whatchamacallit be distributed under the BSD instead of GPL then that's how it goes. Usually the best reason you'd "need" the BSD license if you can't figure out a way to decouple a trade secret from the modified source code. The worst reason would be you're violating software patents, know it, and hope that not releasing the source will keep it quiet. Sometimes there's weird philosophical stuff like hating the idea of helping others.
There is a strange "security thru psuedo-obscurity" thing going on too, since BSD is not overly popular.
Well, until now, BSD never had problems offering GPLed software, like GCC & so on. However, after the software on most GNU packages had been changed to GPLv3, we've seen them react. In FreeBSD 9, they've replaced GCC w/ LLVM due to this license issue, aside from the extra features that LLVM offers. People who previously did not have problems w/ GPLv1 & v2 are having problems now. In fact, since Linux is not going to go GPLv3, don't be surprised if @ some point, Linux too decides to replace GNU userland w/ something else.
There is a good argument for open source, but that involves companies and organizations having the freedom to pick a license of their choice, and fine tune it to how open they want to make it for it to have all the advantages of open source vs how closed they want to make it to protect the income of those who worked to make that software in the first place. B'cos ultimately what makes or breaks a software package is not the 'community', but people who earn their livelihood by working on that package.
There's no way to download this without installing a BitTorrent client.. so, no thanks. I like the look of it, would love to try it, but there's no BT (of any kind) allowed on my networks.
I downloaded PCBSD (a FreeBSD distribution) last weekend. I installed it in an old PC. Everything went fine and it did detect the wireless NIC. I downloaded gcc, g++, gfortran, python and compiled all my programs (console based and graphics based). No surprises. I was either lucky, or FreeBSD/PCBSD is mature enough to be used as desktop OS. :)
It was a nice experience to use something else than Linux, and be productive as well
I was using FreeBSD as my primary OS back in 2000 at work. Was actually quite good for a work OS as the basis for my server admin / php coder role. All Windows req's handled via Citrix metaframe session.
Now I feel old. Thanks.
You have a sick, twisted mind. Please subscribe me to your newsletter.